Penthouse and Pavement: How to Survive in Football Without Sucking Up to the Old Firm

Penthouse and Pavement is not a book for glory-hunters. It is a book about pain. It's about the anguish of watching your team lose 9-2 in the very first game you ever saw, about the horrible inevitability of defeat that so many feel so often. It's about despair, dismay and black, frightening, deathly gloom.

But it's also about hope. About dreams. And about dreams which sometimes, just sometimes, come true. Like the once-in-a-lifetime ecstasy of winning the Cup or a league. And as anyone who's had that moment-of-a-lifetime knows, the joy is even greater because you've known the pain. For Bill Leckie, who has followed St Mirren since 1964, it all became worthwhile when they won the Scottish Cup in 1987. This book is about these clubs and the people who love them. It's about the kind of fan who doesn't go to games expecting to win . . . or, worse, demanding it. This book is about being willing to accept a lifetime of frustration in return for one day of utter wonderment.

1003870479
Penthouse and Pavement: How to Survive in Football Without Sucking Up to the Old Firm

Penthouse and Pavement is not a book for glory-hunters. It is a book about pain. It's about the anguish of watching your team lose 9-2 in the very first game you ever saw, about the horrible inevitability of defeat that so many feel so often. It's about despair, dismay and black, frightening, deathly gloom.

But it's also about hope. About dreams. And about dreams which sometimes, just sometimes, come true. Like the once-in-a-lifetime ecstasy of winning the Cup or a league. And as anyone who's had that moment-of-a-lifetime knows, the joy is even greater because you've known the pain. For Bill Leckie, who has followed St Mirren since 1964, it all became worthwhile when they won the Scottish Cup in 1987. This book is about these clubs and the people who love them. It's about the kind of fan who doesn't go to games expecting to win . . . or, worse, demanding it. This book is about being willing to accept a lifetime of frustration in return for one day of utter wonderment.

8.99 In Stock
Penthouse and Pavement: How to Survive in Football Without Sucking Up to the Old Firm

Penthouse and Pavement: How to Survive in Football Without Sucking Up to the Old Firm

by Bill Leckie
Penthouse and Pavement: How to Survive in Football Without Sucking Up to the Old Firm

Penthouse and Pavement: How to Survive in Football Without Sucking Up to the Old Firm

by Bill Leckie

eBook

$8.99  $10.17 Save 12% Current price is $8.99, Original price is $10.17. You Save 12%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

Penthouse and Pavement is not a book for glory-hunters. It is a book about pain. It's about the anguish of watching your team lose 9-2 in the very first game you ever saw, about the horrible inevitability of defeat that so many feel so often. It's about despair, dismay and black, frightening, deathly gloom.

But it's also about hope. About dreams. And about dreams which sometimes, just sometimes, come true. Like the once-in-a-lifetime ecstasy of winning the Cup or a league. And as anyone who's had that moment-of-a-lifetime knows, the joy is even greater because you've known the pain. For Bill Leckie, who has followed St Mirren since 1964, it all became worthwhile when they won the Scottish Cup in 1987. This book is about these clubs and the people who love them. It's about the kind of fan who doesn't go to games expecting to win . . . or, worse, demanding it. This book is about being willing to accept a lifetime of frustration in return for one day of utter wonderment.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781780573984
Publisher: Mainstream Publishing Company, Limited
Publication date: 01/06/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 256
File size: 337 KB

About the Author

Bill Leckie is a former Bank of Scotland Sports Journalist of the Year and currently writes for the Scottish Sun. He does commentary for Scottish Football League matches for BBC Radio Scotland and often contributes to programmes on Talksport and BBC Radio Five Live. He lives in Falkirk with his wife and son.
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews